John Sainty (footballer) explained

John Sainty
Fullname:John Albert Sainty
Birth Date:24 March 1946
Birth Place:Poplar, London, England
Position:Forward
Youthyears1:1961–1963
Youthclubs1:Tottenham Hotspur
Years1:1963–1967
Clubs1:Tottenham Hotspur
Caps1:0
Goals1:0
Years2:1967–1970
Clubs2:Reading
Caps2:71
Goals2:19
Years3:1970–1974
Clubs3:AFC Bournemouth
Caps3:118
Goals3:20
Years4:1972
Clubs4:Mansfield Town (loan)
Caps4:3
Goals4:0
Years5:1974–1976
Clubs5:Aldershot
Caps5:29
Goals5:0
Nationalteam1:England Schoolboys
Manageryears1:1982–1983
Managerclubs1:Chester City
Manageryears2:1986–1987
Managerclubs2:Armthorpe Welfare
Manageryears3:1987
Managerclubs3:Mossley
Manageryears4:2004–?
Managerclubs4:Bemerton Heath Harlequins (head coach)

John Albert Sainty (24 March 1946 – 1 April 2023) was an English professional footballer in the 1960s and 1970s who went on to manage Chester City.

Playing career

As a player, Sainty (a forward) progressed through the youth ranks at Tottenham Hotspur and represented England Schoolboys, but he left White Hart Lane in 1967 after failing to make a Football League appearance. Over the next nine years Sainty played for Reading, AFC Bournemouth, Mansfield Town and Aldershot. He ended his career with 221 Football League appearances and 39 goals to his name.

Coaching and managerial career

Sainty began a coaching career under John Bond.[1] The duo worked together at Norwich City and Manchester City before Sainty went alone by taking the Chester manager's job (initially on a caretaker basis) in November 1982 after Cliff Sear stepped down.

Sainty led the club to a mid-table finish in Division Four in 1982–83 and the semi-finals of the Football League Trophy, but financial problems meant Sainty was told to halve the wage bill at the end of the season.[2] Most of his signings were non-contract players such as Paul Manns, Paul Raynor, Trevor Phillips, John Ryan and Dennis Wann,[3] while youngsters including Peter Bulmer and Phil Harrington became regulars in the side. Chester endured a miserable start to 1983–84 and had just one league win to their name when Sainty left the club in November 1983. They had though overturned a 3–0 first-leg deficit to knock Bolton Wanderers out of the League Cup in the first round.

Sainty teamed up again with Bond at Burnley, before managing non-league sides Armthorpe Welfare and Mossley. He later became assistant manager to Danny Bergara at Stockport County and worked as academy director at Southampton.[4] He then became head coach at Bemerton Heath Harlequins.[5]

Death

Sainty died on 1 April 2023, at the age of 77.[6] [7] [8]

Honours

AFC Bournemouth

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Turner & White . The Breedon Book of Football Managers. 1993. 218 . 1-873626-32-0.
  2. Book: Chas Sumner . On the Borderline: The Official History of Chester City 1885–1997 . 1997. 99 . 1-874427-52-6.
  3. Book: Chas Sumner . On the Borderline: The Official History of Chester City 1885–1997 . 1997. 98–99 . 1-874427-52-6.
  4. News: Webb was no reject! . This is Hampshire . 2000-12-13 . 2008-01-20 .
  5. Web site: Norwich City profile . ex-cancaries.co.uk . 2008-01-20.
  6. News: Club Mourns Passing of 1970/71 Promotion Hero Sainty . 27 April 2023 . AFCB . 3 April 2023.
  7. News: Former Southampton FC scout John Sainty has died aged 77 . 27 April 2023 . Southern Daily Echo . 27 April 2023.
  8. Web site: Sad to announce to the football community the passing of my father-in-law John Sainty on 1st April. . Marc Brown on Twitter . 27 April 2023.